What is Strategy & Why is it Important?
The definition of strategy is multifaceted. Its broadest meaning is to provide a game plan for how the organisation will achieve its stated goals. This game plan is typically focused on achieving commercial and/or positioning success in the marketplace. This type of strategy will outline a series of tasks and actions required to execute the plan and achieve objectives within a defined period of time. They can take on different directions in their effort to achieve a winning outcome. The key directions identified by business authors[1] tends to fall into three main categories:
Designing a winning strategy has become a necessary perquisite for companies and government entities to succeed in today’s hyper-competitive environment. Aggressive competitive forces exist in almost every industry and government sector. These forces are driven by globalisation, sophisticated technologies and disruptive business models. Together these forces have diminished the ability for organisations to compete on traditional dimensions such a providing low prices. Today, organisations are required to be innovative in their strategies to avoid becoming irrelevant in a fast-changing and crowded marketplace. To achieve market differentiation organisations need to apply best practice methodologies for strategy formulation. This will enable them to achieve a game plan that is realistic, achievable and designed using a fact-based approach.
Strategies can serve multiple purposes. In an organisation there are usually multiple strategies operating at the same time. A master business strategy provides the whole-of-company plan for how it will succeed in the marketplace. Secondary market supporting strategies will define specific strategies for achieving success with customers. These market supporting strategies would cover such areas as: go-to-market, marketing, and customer experience. The third level of strategies provide the plans for organisational support. These strategies cover departments such as Human Resources, IT, and Finance. Therefore, there are three levels of strategy typically operating in any organisation. These strategies need to tightly align with the master business strategy and achieve individual objectives and targets if the organisation is going to be successful in achieving its overall larger goals.
The methodology used to design a strategy will ultimately determine whether the design achieves the purpose it was intended for. Too often strategies are developed using poorly conceived ideas and practices that lead to equally poorly executed plans unable to achieve their objectives. The primary focus of this paper is to outline best practices in strategy formulation to help reduce the risk of failure.
Problematic Practices in Strategy Design
There are some common mistakes made when organisations embark on an exercise to formulate a strategy. The fundamental problem associated with poorly conceived strategies lies in not following a structured process when formulating the strategy, or taking short-cuts along the way. This type of approach leads to incorrect conclusions and flawed strategy design.
The importance of adhering to a structured process is not properly understood. On the surface the task of formulating a strategy may appear simple, but there is enough evidence of poorly conceived strategies to highlight areas of concern. These issues reinforce the need to take a structured approach for strategy design to avoid the downstream consequences of an ill-conceived strategy. Some of the common mistakes include:
All of these problematic practices can be avoided if you follow a structured process based on best practices.
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Best Practice Methodology for Strategy Design
Strategies that achieve their objectives have some key characteristics. These are:
Best practice strategy development is based on two fundamental pillars:
These pillars are the basis for any well-developed strategy. By following a structured process you can achieve a strategy based on these two key pillars. The best practises for developing a strategy are based on 13 key steps. These steps should be followed to enable you to achieve a strategy design with the highest probability of meeting its objectives and adding the desired value back to the organisation. The steps to take are as follows:
Answering these basic questions enables you to narrow down the scope of the strategy and also ensures there is no overlap with other strategies operating in the organisation.
This is not the entire list but having these facts on hand will help ensure your marketing strategy is based on factual information and not guesses.
The draft strategy does not need to be perfect. It does however need to be substantive enough to enable you to progress to the next step.
The Value of a Good Strategy
Unfortunately the value of a good strategy is only ever realised when an organisation experiences the impact of a poorly designed strategy that misses its objectives on all fronts. The enormous cost to the organisation can run into the hundreds of millions of dollars and in the worst case can end bankrupting a company. The cost of implementing a poorly designed strategy significantly outweighs the investment in developing a strategy using the best practices outlined.
The 13 steps outlined may appear too detailed but each step is required to build a case based on facts and reliable evidence. The final validation of the strategy with stakeholders is also a required step in the process to ensure assumptions used in the formulation of the strategy are a true reflection of the likely causal relationship and outcomes to expect if the strategy is implemented.
Most strategies that don’t achieve their outcomes are formulated around exaggerated projections that have no scientific basis. Caution should be made about the use of research firm findings for determining the size of a marketplace or projected growth of a particular product offering. Many organisations have fallen foul of this trap and have paid hefty prices for basing their strategies around lofty and unrealistic numbers. Ultimately, it’s better to have a strategy you can execute and achieve a realistic positive outcome than to create a “Disney-like” strategy that ends disappointing a large number of stakeholders.
[1] What is Strategy, Again? Andrea Ovans, Harvard Business Review, May, 2015
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